Levels of Perception
within the Hidden Order of Art
What we feel when facing a work of art is
an individual experience that is directly related to our capacity to
receive the intentions of the artist and complete them within our
own mental or emotional structure. A true work of art is an
expression of the creation of the world and however modern and
impenetrable it may appear to the layman, it should lend itself to a
number of levels of perception so as to incite a response from the
observer from within his or her own particular sphere of
comprehension. In this way the observer, by his unique
interpretation of the work, is also its co-author.

The hermetic tradition for the
transmission of knowledge on varying levels of consciousness worked
in this way. The poetical invocations of the ancient Bards evoked
simultaneously mystical meanings for the profane and magical
knowledge for the initiated. Primitive writings were composed of
signs evoking ideas. Both these means of transmitting knowledge had
the advantage of obliging the receiver to think and to interpret the
teachings buried within the words, using his own individual
understanding of the hidden meanings enclosed within the signs of a
symbolic language.
The imagery depicted in stone,
found in churches and cathedrals, are the three dimensional
equivalents of this hermetic language where the perceiver is called
upon to decode the message at his own particular level of
consciousness.
Teachings were transmitted in this way up
until the end of the middle ages when symbolism was to gradually
lose its esoteric significance, eventually depicting only its
artistic and religious implications.
The hermetic tradition passed into the
shadows safeguarded by alchemists, cabalists, secret societies and…
artists. The artist who remains connected to the hidden order of art
perpetrates this tradition intuitively through his work to this very
day. By holding back that which may be completed by the onlooker, by
suggesting rather than asserting his intentions, he encourages the
spectator to contribute to the proposed work of art; his oeuvre
being only half of the complete experience. In other words, a true
work of art only becomes whole when we take it into
ourselves.
The encounter can be subliminal occurring on an emotional plane or
it can be a conscious intellectual experience as often happens when
confronted with art today, notably conceptual art that conveys ideas
rather than feelings and which appeals to the conscious mind. But
whatever form it takes and whatever the intention of the artist, the
experience will be directly proportional to the onlookers level of
perception, the work of art becoming the receptacle in which the
hidden intentions of the artist and the acuity of the onlooker fuse
together momentarily in a celebration of universal consciousness.